ADSL
Technology Code: 11
About ADSL
Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) delivers internet over traditional copper telephone lines. Download speeds are typically faster than upload speeds, with maximum download speeds around 24 Mbps. ADSL is widely available in areas with existing telephone infrastructure.
Reading the FCC Numbers for ADSL
ADSL is classified by the FCC under technology code 11 in the Form 477 dataset, and nationwide it accounts for 3,788,469 deployment records. That makes it one of the most widely filed technologies in the current dataset. Each record represents a single provider declaring it serves at least one location in a specific census block with this technology class, so the count reflects the combined geographic and operator footprint rather than the number of homes or businesses actively connected.
Because ADSL falls in the copper DSL family, its filings cluster in the parts of the country where that underlying infrastructure exists. State pages on this site break down how the 3,788,469 records distribute geographically, and provider pages show which operators contribute the most filings for this technology code. Cross-referencing the two is the fastest way to see whether a given market has real competition on ADSL or whether one incumbent dominates the filings.
One important caveat when interpreting these numbers: Form 477 historically allowed providers to mark an entire census block as served if they could reach even one address in it, which inflates apparent coverage in sparsely populated blocks. The FCC's newer Broadband Data Collection tightens this, but Form 477 remains the largest historical record of U.S. broadband deployment. Treat ADSL record counts as a measure of where providers have declared capability, not as a guarantee of availability, speed, or price at any specific address.
Data Source
Technology classification and deployment records from the FCC Form 477 broadband deployment dataset.
Disclaimer: Data from FCC Form 477. For informational purposes only. Deployment records represent provider filings, not guaranteed service availability at specific addresses. Always verify broadband options directly with providers.
Related Data
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.